Use of hot or neutral for light shutoff

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kwired

Electron manager
Location
NE Nebraska
If you unscrewed the bulb(s), it made the switch touch safe for repair or troubleshooting without having to pull the fuse for the whole circuit. (There were not a lot of circuits in one house back in those days, so pulling the fuse could hit all of the lights.) My SWAG anyway.


I can see some logic to that, but chances are the lamp/lampholder needs servicing more often than the switch, and you have a continuous "hot" conductor at the light. They also usually had fuses in both grounded and ungrounded conductors in the days when K&T was common.

Another problem was any ground fault in the switched lead meant the light never shuts off - maybe they wanted it to fail in this mode for some reason.
 
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